4.4 Article

Explicit and Implicit Gender-Related Stereotyping in Transgender, Gender Expansive, and Cisgender Adults

Journal

ARCHIVES OF SEXUAL BEHAVIOR
Volume 51, Issue 4, Pages 2065-2076

Publisher

SPRINGER/PLENUM PUBLISHERS
DOI: 10.1007/s10508-022-02339-y

Keywords

Gender-related stereotyping; Ambivalent sexism; Transgender; Gender expansive; Implicit Association Test

Funding

  1. Wilfred and Joyce Posluns Chair in Women's Brain Health and Aging [WJP-150643]
  2. Jacqueline Ford Gender and Health Fund
  3. National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)

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Little is known about gender-related stereotyping among transgender and gender expansive adults. This study examined explicit gender attitudes and implicit gender-related stereotyping among different gender groups. The findings revealed significant differences in gender discrimination and gender conceptions among different groups, which were related to both assigned sex at birth and current gender identification.
Little is known about gender-related stereotyping among transgender and gender expansive adults. Using the Ambivalent Sexism Inventory (AIS; Glick & Fiske, 1996), we examined explicit gender attitudes in 3298 cisgender, transgender, and gender expansive respondents designated female at birth (FAB; n = 1976 cisgender, n = 108 transgender, n = 188 gender expansive) and male at birth (MAB; n = 922 cisgender, n = 52 transgender, n = 52 gender expansive). In order to learn more about implicit gender-related stereotyping, a subset of 822 participants (FAB; n = 445 cisgender, n = 32 transgender, n = 51 gender expansive. MAB; n = 254 cisgender, n = 21 transgender, n = 19 gender expansive) completed the gender-leadership Implicit Association Test (IAT; Dasgupta & Asgari, 2004). Cisgender men scored significantly higher than all other groups on hostile sexism, but patterns of endorsement for benevolent sexism and implicit attitudes were more nuanced, with cisgender women and gender expansive FAB often scoring significantly below other groups. We observed that transgender men and transgender women, along with cisgender men and gender expansive MAB, moderately endorsed essentialist views regarding differences between men and women (i.e., complementary gender differentiation). These data reveal novel patterns of gender-related stereotyping, with some corresponding to sex designated at birth and others corresponding to current gender identification. Together, these findings suggest that one's experienced gender, designated sex at birth, and the intersection between them may relate to gender stereotyping, underscoring the importance of including transgender and gender expansive individuals in this research.

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